13 results match your criteria: "UCL Institute of Child Health London[Affiliation]"

Purpose: ECMO is an escalation treatment for hypoxic respiratory failure in patients with CDH. Open repair has been advocated after ECMO indicating that physiological changes associated to thoracoscopic repair were not well tolerated.

Methods: We have performed a retrospective review of all patients who underwent ECMO prior CDH repair over a 7 year period (2015-2021).

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Article Synopsis
  • The Movement Disorders Society (MDS) Task Force on Pediatrics surveyed transition services for young adults with movement disorders due to limited existing data.
  • The online survey, sent to MDS members, gathered information on service structure, location, and key issues discussed in transition clinics.
  • Results showed 252 members from 67 countries participated, with 59% offering transition clinics, highlighting trends in patient age, staffing, and common medical/social concerns.
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Determining the protection an individual has to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV-2) variants of concern (VoCs) is crucial for future immune surveillance, vaccine development, and understanding of the changing immune response. We devised an informative assay to current ELISA-based serology using multiplexed, baited, targeted proteomics for direct detection of multiple proteins in the SARS-CoV-2 anti-spike antibody immunocomplex. Serum from individuals collected after infection or first- and second-dose vaccination demonstrates this approach and shows concordance with existing serology and neutralization.

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The aim of this study was to evaluate whether specific etiologies of neonatal seizures have distinct ictal electroclinical features. A systematic review of English articles using the PubMed database since 2004 (last update 9/26/16). Search terms included text words and Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) terms related to neonatal seizures.

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Objective: To determine the prevalence of active convulsive epilepsy (ACE) and describe the clinical characteristics and associated factors among a rural Ugandan population.

Methods: The entire population in Iganga/Mayuge Health Demographic Surveillance Site (IM-HDSS) was screened using two questions about seizures during a door-to-door census exercise. Those who screened positive were assessed by a clinician to confirm diagnosis of epilepsy.

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Objectives: The distribution of pathology in neurodegenerative disease can be predicted by the organizational characteristics of white matter in healthy brains. However, we have very little evidence for the impact these pathological changes have on brain function. Understanding any such link between structure and function is critical for understanding how underlying brain pathology influences the progressive behavioral changes associated with neurodegeneration.

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-associated neurodegeneration comprises a heterogeneous spectrum of age-related phenotypes, with three forms classically recognized, including infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) with onset in infancy, atypical neuroaxonal dystrophy (atypical NAD) with onset in childhood, and dystonia-parkinsonism (PARK14) with onset in early adulthood. We describe 3 cases that challenge this view, discuss the related literature, and suggest that mutations cause a phenotypic continuum rather than three discrete phenotypes, further ensuing clinical implications.

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Chronic Infection with Rotavirus Vaccine Strains in UK Children with Severe Combined Immunodeficiency.

Pediatr Infect Dis J

September 2015

Department of Paediatric Immunology Newcastle upon Tyne Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom Department of Paediatric Immunology Great Ormond Street Hospital London, United Kingdom Department of Laboratory Medicine Newcastle upon Tyne Hospital NHS Foundation Trust. Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom Molecular and Cellular Immunology section UCL Institute of Child Health London, United Kingdom Department of Paediatric Immunology Institute of Cellular Medicine Newcastle University Newcastle upon Tyne Hospital NHS Foundation Trust Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.

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Active surveillance of visual impairment due to adverse drug reactions: findings from a national study in the United Kingdom.

Pharmacol Res Perspect

February 2015

Life Course Epidemiology and Biostatistics Section, University College London (UCL) Institute of Child Health London, United Kingdom ; Ulverscroft Vision Research Group London, United Kingdom ; Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust London, United Kingdom ; National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and UCL Institute of Ophthalmology London, United Kingdom.

Unlabelled: As visual impairment (VI) due to adverse drug reactions (ADR) is rare in adults and children, there is an incomplete evidence base to inform guidance for screening and for counseling patients on the potential risks of medications. We report on suspected drugs and the eye conditions found in a national study of incidence of diagnosis of visual impairment due to suspected ADR. Case ascertainment was via the British Ophthalmological Surveillance Unit (BOSU), between March 2010 and February 2012, with follow-up after 6 months.

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Nutrition is crucial to the initial development of the central nervous system (CNS), and then to its maintenance, because both depend on dietary intake to supply the elements required to develop and fuel the system. Diet in early life is often seen in the context of "programming" where a stimulus occurring during a vulnerable period can have long-lasting or even lifetime effects on some aspect of the organism's structure or function. Nutrition was first shown to be a programming stimulus for growth, and then for cognitive behavior, in animal studies that were able to employ methods that allowed the demonstration of neural effects of early nutrition.

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Explanations for the trend of increasing childhood obesity have yet to be identified. The authors examined members of the 1958 British birth cohort (age 7 years, n = 8,552) and offspring (ages 4-9 years, n = 1,889) born to mothers under age 30 years to establish whether risk factors for childhood obesity have changed over time (1965-1991). The authors applied multilevel linear and logistic models that account for within-family correlations in order to examine associations between risk factors and childhood body mass index (BMI; weight (kg)/height (m)(2)) (age- and sex-specific standard deviation scores and overweight/obesity) in the 2 populations.

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